It's no longer just hyperbole: This is truly the snowiest Ann Arbor winter ever.

With 4 inches of snow hitting Ann Arbor during Wednesday's winter storm, Ann Arbor moved above 90.3 inches of snow for the 2013-14 season, according to University of Michigan staff meteorologist Dennis Kahlbaum. That tops the record of 89.8 inches set in the 2007-08 season.

Sarah Schultz, meteorologist at the National Weather Service, said the snow should stop falling by the middle of the afternoon. At 1 p.m., she said Jackson was still reporting moderate snowfall, so it’s expected Ann Arbor will still be walking in a winter wonderland for a little while.

The morning commute in Washtenaw County was treacherous and it appears the afternoon commute will be very similar. Washtenaw County dispatchers reported the roads were “relatively miserable” and there are patches of ice on area roadways.

At 1 p.m., a multi-vehicle crash on westbound Interstate 94 between Baker and Parker roads was the most serious incident in the county, dispatchers reported. Traffic is generally slow on all area freeways.

Many of the crashes were reportedly just minor road runoffs without serious injuries.

City of Ann Arbor plows were still working on major roads as of 1:30 p.m. An official at the city’s Field Operations office said plow crews should start moving to smaller, neighborhood roads at 2 p.m. or when the snow starts to slow down.

High winds are causing a lot of drifting snow and the area remains under a winter storm warning until 3 p.m.

Temperatures won’t get above 20 degrees for the next day or so, according to NWS. But by Friday, some of the snow could melt. Temperatures are expected to reach about 43 degrees and sun is in the forecast.

The forecast calls for decreasing temperatures over the weekend, with highs of 35 degrees on Saturday and in the 20s on Sunday.

Here is the list of the top 10 snowiest winters in Ann Arbor’s history, as of noon, according to Kahlbaum.